Results 151 to 160 of about 117,797 (335)
Calculation of vaporization rates assuming various rate determining steps: Application to the resistojet [PDF]
The various steps that could control the vaporization rate of a material are discussed. These steps include the actual vaporization, flow rate of matrix gas, chemical reaction, gas diffusion, and solid state diffusion.
May, C. E.
core +1 more source
A near infrared‐responsive microscale cantilever is developed using a 3D‐printable composite based on photocurable resin consisting of sepiolite and graphene flakes. The material absorbs 1064 nm light, causing shape transformation with an average displacement of 1.3 mm in 1.7 s. Displacement is measured via video recording.
Karolina Laszczyk +3 more
wiley +1 more source
A highly stable, low‐temperature phosphate glass is developed for multimaterial additive manufacturing of multifunctional microfluidics. Glass, metal conductors, and sacrificial polymer are coprinted, enabling monolithic fabrication. The sacrificial paste forms precise channels and decomposes during sintering.
Babak Mazinani +2 more
wiley +1 more source
Lithium‐mediated electrocatalysis enables sustainable N2 fixation but hindered by parasitic Li deposition. An oxide‐oxide nanocomposite (LiVO3/LiZnVO4) structurally integrates lithium into active sites, suppressing plating and enhancing N2 activation and HER supression.
Naina Goyal +4 more
wiley +1 more source
The Role of Vaporization in High Percentage Oil Recovery by Pressure Maintenance [PDF]
A.B. Cook, G.B. Spencer, A.F. Bayazeed
openalex +1 more source
Direct Recycling of Cold Work Tool Steel Swarf into New Cutting Disks via Field‐Assisted Sintering
Through a sintering method known as field‐assisted sintering technology/spark plasma sintering, cold work tool steel swarf can be directly recycled into new cutting disks. This method is capable of densifying the unconventional powder morphology of swarf, and it can also seal grinding contaminants, such as Al2O3, into the steel matrix.
Monica Keszler +4 more
wiley +1 more source
It is demonstrated that laser‐induced graphene (LIG) can be encapsulated while preserving its electrical conductivity and enhancing its mechanical properties. Unlike previous encapsulation attempts, the optimal conditions described here result in sheet resistance of ≈2 Ω sq−1, resistance increase of only 5% upon encapsulation, and vastly improved ...
Fatemeh Bayat +3 more
wiley +1 more source

